715cda787c
Signed-off-by: Eric Engestrom <eric@engestrom.ch> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
381 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
381 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
==========================================
|
|
Xillybus driver for generic FPGA interface
|
|
==========================================
|
|
|
|
Author: Eli Billauer, Xillybus Ltd. (http://xillybus.com)
|
|
Email: eli.billauer@gmail.com or as advertised on Xillybus' site.
|
|
|
|
Contents:
|
|
|
|
- Introduction
|
|
-- Background
|
|
-- Xillybus Overview
|
|
|
|
- Usage
|
|
-- User interface
|
|
-- Synchronization
|
|
-- Seekable pipes
|
|
|
|
- Internals
|
|
-- Source code organization
|
|
-- Pipe attributes
|
|
-- Host never reads from the FPGA
|
|
-- Channels, pipes, and the message channel
|
|
-- Data streaming
|
|
-- Data granularity
|
|
-- Probing
|
|
-- Buffer allocation
|
|
-- The "nonempty" message (supporting poll)
|
|
|
|
|
|
INTRODUCTION
|
|
============
|
|
|
|
Background
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
An FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) is a piece of logic hardware, which
|
|
can be programmed to become virtually anything that is usually found as a
|
|
dedicated chipset: For instance, a display adapter, network interface card,
|
|
or even a processor with its peripherals. FPGAs are the LEGO of hardware:
|
|
Based upon certain building blocks, you make your own toys the way you like
|
|
them. It's usually pointless to reimplement something that is already
|
|
available on the market as a chipset, so FPGAs are mostly used when some
|
|
special functionality is needed, and the production volume is relatively low
|
|
(hence not justifying the development of an ASIC).
|
|
|
|
The challenge with FPGAs is that everything is implemented at a very low
|
|
level, even lower than assembly language. In order to allow FPGA designers to
|
|
focus on their specific project, and not reinvent the wheel over and over
|
|
again, pre-designed building blocks, IP cores, are often used. These are the
|
|
FPGA parallels of library functions. IP cores may implement certain
|
|
mathematical functions, a functional unit (e.g. a USB interface), an entire
|
|
processor (e.g. ARM) or anything that might come handy. Think of them as a
|
|
building block, with electrical wires dangling on the sides for connection to
|
|
other blocks.
|
|
|
|
One of the daunting tasks in FPGA design is communicating with a fullblown
|
|
operating system (actually, with the processor running it): Implementing the
|
|
low-level bus protocol and the somewhat higher-level interface with the host
|
|
(registers, interrupts, DMA etc.) is a project in itself. When the FPGA's
|
|
function is a well-known one (e.g. a video adapter card, or a NIC), it can
|
|
make sense to design the FPGA's interface logic specifically for the project.
|
|
A special driver is then written to present the FPGA as a well-known interface
|
|
to the kernel and/or user space. In that case, there is no reason to treat the
|
|
FPGA differently than any device on the bus.
|
|
|
|
It's however common that the desired data communication doesn't fit any well-
|
|
known peripheral function. Also, the effort of designing an elegant
|
|
abstraction for the data exchange is often considered too big. In those cases,
|
|
a quicker and possibly less elegant solution is sought: The driver is
|
|
effectively written as a user space program, leaving the kernel space part
|
|
with just elementary data transport. This still requires designing some
|
|
interface logic for the FPGA, and write a simple ad-hoc driver for the kernel.
|
|
|
|
Xillybus Overview
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
Xillybus is an IP core and a Linux driver. Together, they form a kit for
|
|
elementary data transport between an FPGA and the host, providing pipe-like
|
|
data streams with a straightforward user interface. It's intended as a low-
|
|
effort solution for mixed FPGA-host projects, for which it makes sense to
|
|
have the project-specific part of the driver running in a user-space program.
|
|
|
|
Since the communication requirements may vary significantly from one FPGA
|
|
project to another (the number of data pipes needed in each direction and
|
|
their attributes), there isn't one specific chunk of logic being the Xillybus
|
|
IP core. Rather, the IP core is configured and built based upon a
|
|
specification given by its end user.
|
|
|
|
Xillybus presents independent data streams, which resemble pipes or TCP/IP
|
|
communication to the user. At the host side, a character device file is used
|
|
just like any pipe file. On the FPGA side, hardware FIFOs are used to stream
|
|
the data. This is contrary to a common method of communicating through fixed-
|
|
sized buffers (even though such buffers are used by Xillybus under the hood).
|
|
There may be more than a hundred of these streams on a single IP core, but
|
|
also no more than one, depending on the configuration.
|
|
|
|
In order to ease the deployment of the Xillybus IP core, it contains a simple
|
|
data structure which completely defines the core's configuration. The Linux
|
|
driver fetches this data structure during its initialization process, and sets
|
|
up the DMA buffers and character devices accordingly. As a result, a single
|
|
driver is used to work out of the box with any Xillybus IP core.
|
|
|
|
The data structure just mentioned should not be confused with PCI's
|
|
configuration space or the Flattened Device Tree.
|
|
|
|
USAGE
|
|
=====
|
|
|
|
User interface
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
On the host, all interface with Xillybus is done through /dev/xillybus_*
|
|
device files, which are generated automatically as the drivers loads. The
|
|
names of these files depend on the IP core that is loaded in the FPGA (see
|
|
Probing below). To communicate with the FPGA, open the device file that
|
|
corresponds to the hardware FIFO you want to send data or receive data from,
|
|
and use plain write() or read() calls, just like with a regular pipe. In
|
|
particular, it makes perfect sense to go:
|
|
|
|
$ cat mydata > /dev/xillybus_thisfifo
|
|
|
|
$ cat /dev/xillybus_thatfifo > hisdata
|
|
|
|
possibly pressing CTRL-C as some stage, even though the xillybus_* pipes have
|
|
the capability to send an EOF (but may not use it).
|
|
|
|
The driver and hardware are designed to behave sensibly as pipes, including:
|
|
|
|
* Supporting non-blocking I/O (by setting O_NONBLOCK on open() ).
|
|
|
|
* Supporting poll() and select().
|
|
|
|
* Being bandwidth efficient under load (using DMA) but also handle small
|
|
pieces of data sent across (like TCP/IP) by autoflushing.
|
|
|
|
A device file can be read only, write only or bidirectional. Bidirectional
|
|
device files are treated like two independent pipes (except for sharing a
|
|
"channel" structure in the implementation code).
|
|
|
|
Synchronization
|
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
Xillybus pipes are configured (on the IP core) to be either synchronous or
|
|
asynchronous. For a synchronous pipe, write() returns successfully only after
|
|
some data has been submitted and acknowledged by the FPGA. This slows down
|
|
bulk data transfers, and is nearly impossible for use with streams that
|
|
require data at a constant rate: There is no data transmitted to the FPGA
|
|
between write() calls, in particular when the process loses the CPU.
|
|
|
|
When a pipe is configured asynchronous, write() returns if there was enough
|
|
room in the buffers to store any of the data in the buffers.
|
|
|
|
For FPGA to host pipes, asynchronous pipes allow data transfer from the FPGA
|
|
as soon as the respective device file is opened, regardless of if the data
|
|
has been requested by a read() call. On synchronous pipes, only the amount
|
|
of data requested by a read() call is transmitted.
|
|
|
|
In summary, for synchronous pipes, data between the host and FPGA is
|
|
transmitted only to satisfy the read() or write() call currently handled
|
|
by the driver, and those calls wait for the transmission to complete before
|
|
returning.
|
|
|
|
Note that the synchronization attribute has nothing to do with the possibility
|
|
that read() or write() completes less bytes than requested. There is a
|
|
separate configuration flag ("allowpartial") that determines whether such a
|
|
partial completion is allowed.
|
|
|
|
Seekable pipes
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
A synchronous pipe can be configured to have the stream's position exposed
|
|
to the user logic at the FPGA. Such a pipe is also seekable on the host API.
|
|
With this feature, a memory or register interface can be attached on the
|
|
FPGA side to the seekable stream. Reading or writing to a certain address in
|
|
the attached memory is done by seeking to the desired address, and calling
|
|
read() or write() as required.
|
|
|
|
|
|
INTERNALS
|
|
=========
|
|
|
|
Source code organization
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
The Xillybus driver consists of a core module, xillybus_core.c, and modules
|
|
that depend on the specific bus interface (xillybus_of.c and xillybus_pcie.c).
|
|
|
|
The bus specific modules are those probed when a suitable device is found by
|
|
the kernel. Since the DMA mapping and synchronization functions, which are bus
|
|
dependent by their nature, are used by the core module, a
|
|
xilly_endpoint_hardware structure is passed to the core module on
|
|
initialization. This structure is populated with pointers to wrapper functions
|
|
which execute the DMA-related operations on the bus.
|
|
|
|
Pipe attributes
|
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
Each pipe has a number of attributes which are set when the FPGA component
|
|
(IP core) is built. They are fetched from the IDT (the data structure which
|
|
defines the core's configuration, see Probing below) by xilly_setupchannels()
|
|
in xillybus_core.c as follows:
|
|
|
|
* is_writebuf: The pipe's direction. A non-zero value means it's an FPGA to
|
|
host pipe (the FPGA "writes").
|
|
|
|
* channelnum: The pipe's identification number in communication between the
|
|
host and FPGA.
|
|
|
|
* format: The underlying data width. See Data Granularity below.
|
|
|
|
* allowpartial: A non-zero value means that a read() or write() (whichever
|
|
applies) may return with less than the requested number of bytes. The common
|
|
choice is a non-zero value, to match standard UNIX behavior.
|
|
|
|
* synchronous: A non-zero value means that the pipe is synchronous. See
|
|
Synchronization above.
|
|
|
|
* bufsize: Each DMA buffer's size. Always a power of two.
|
|
|
|
* bufnum: The number of buffers allocated for this pipe. Always a power of two.
|
|
|
|
* exclusive_open: A non-zero value forces exclusive opening of the associated
|
|
device file. If the device file is bidirectional, and already opened only in
|
|
one direction, the opposite direction may be opened once.
|
|
|
|
* seekable: A non-zero value indicates that the pipe is seekable. See
|
|
Seekable pipes above.
|
|
|
|
* supports_nonempty: A non-zero value (which is typical) indicates that the
|
|
hardware will send the messages that are necessary to support select() and
|
|
poll() for this pipe.
|
|
|
|
Host never reads from the FPGA
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Even though PCI Express is hotpluggable in general, a typical motherboard
|
|
doesn't expect a card to go away all of the sudden. But since the PCIe card
|
|
is based upon reprogrammable logic, a sudden disappearance from the bus is
|
|
quite likely as a result of an accidental reprogramming of the FPGA while the
|
|
host is up. In practice, nothing happens immediately in such a situation. But
|
|
if the host attempts to read from an address that is mapped to the PCI Express
|
|
device, that leads to an immediate freeze of the system on some motherboards,
|
|
even though the PCIe standard requires a graceful recovery.
|
|
|
|
In order to avoid these freezes, the Xillybus driver refrains completely from
|
|
reading from the device's register space. All communication from the FPGA to
|
|
the host is done through DMA. In particular, the Interrupt Service Routine
|
|
doesn't follow the common practice of checking a status register when it's
|
|
invoked. Rather, the FPGA prepares a small buffer which contains short
|
|
messages, which inform the host what the interrupt was about.
|
|
|
|
This mechanism is used on non-PCIe buses as well for the sake of uniformity.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Channels, pipes, and the message channel
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Each of the (possibly bidirectional) pipes presented to the user is allocated
|
|
a data channel between the FPGA and the host. The distinction between channels
|
|
and pipes is necessary only because of channel 0, which is used for interrupt-
|
|
related messages from the FPGA, and has no pipe attached to it.
|
|
|
|
Data streaming
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
Even though a non-segmented data stream is presented to the user at both
|
|
sides, the implementation relies on a set of DMA buffers which is allocated
|
|
for each channel. For the sake of illustration, let's take the FPGA to host
|
|
direction: As data streams into the respective channel's interface in the
|
|
FPGA, the Xillybus IP core writes it to one of the DMA buffers. When the
|
|
buffer is full, the FPGA informs the host about that (appending a
|
|
XILLYMSG_OPCODE_RELEASEBUF message channel 0 and sending an interrupt if
|
|
necessary). The host responds by making the data available for reading through
|
|
the character device. When all data has been read, the host writes on the
|
|
the FPGA's buffer control register, allowing the buffer's overwriting. Flow
|
|
control mechanisms exist on both sides to prevent underflows and overflows.
|
|
|
|
This is not good enough for creating a TCP/IP-like stream: If the data flow
|
|
stops momentarily before a DMA buffer is filled, the intuitive expectation is
|
|
that the partial data in buffer will arrive anyhow, despite the buffer not
|
|
being completed. This is implemented by adding a field in the
|
|
XILLYMSG_OPCODE_RELEASEBUF message, through which the FPGA informs not just
|
|
which buffer is submitted, but how much data it contains.
|
|
|
|
But the FPGA will submit a partially filled buffer only if directed to do so
|
|
by the host. This situation occurs when the read() method has been blocking
|
|
for XILLY_RX_TIMEOUT jiffies (currently 10 ms), after which the host commands
|
|
the FPGA to submit a DMA buffer as soon as it can. This timeout mechanism
|
|
balances between bus bandwidth efficiency (preventing a lot of partially
|
|
filled buffers being sent) and a latency held fairly low for tails of data.
|
|
|
|
A similar setting is used in the host to FPGA direction. The handling of
|
|
partial DMA buffers is somewhat different, though. The user can tell the
|
|
driver to submit all data it has in the buffers to the FPGA, by issuing a
|
|
write() with the byte count set to zero. This is similar to a flush request,
|
|
but it doesn't block. There is also an autoflushing mechanism, which triggers
|
|
an equivalent flush roughly XILLY_RX_TIMEOUT jiffies after the last write().
|
|
This allows the user to be oblivious about the underlying buffering mechanism
|
|
and yet enjoy a stream-like interface.
|
|
|
|
Note that the issue of partial buffer flushing is irrelevant for pipes having
|
|
the "synchronous" attribute nonzero, since synchronous pipes don't allow data
|
|
to lay around in the DMA buffers between read() and write() anyhow.
|
|
|
|
Data granularity
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
The data arrives or is sent at the FPGA as 8, 16 or 32 bit wide words, as
|
|
configured by the "format" attribute. Whenever possible, the driver attempts
|
|
to hide this when the pipe is accessed differently from its natural alignment.
|
|
For example, reading single bytes from a pipe with 32 bit granularity works
|
|
with no issues. Writing single bytes to pipes with 16 or 32 bit granularity
|
|
will also work, but the driver can't send partially completed words to the
|
|
FPGA, so the transmission of up to one word may be held until it's fully
|
|
occupied with user data.
|
|
|
|
This somewhat complicates the handling of host to FPGA streams, because
|
|
when a buffer is flushed, it may contain up to 3 bytes don't form a word in
|
|
the FPGA, and hence can't be sent. To prevent loss of data, these leftover
|
|
bytes need to be moved to the next buffer. The parts in xillybus_core.c
|
|
that mention "leftovers" in some way are related to this complication.
|
|
|
|
Probing
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
As mentioned earlier, the number of pipes that are created when the driver
|
|
loads and their attributes depend on the Xillybus IP core in the FPGA. During
|
|
the driver's initialization, a blob containing configuration info, the
|
|
Interface Description Table (IDT), is sent from the FPGA to the host. The
|
|
bootstrap process is done in three phases:
|
|
|
|
1. Acquire the length of the IDT, so a buffer can be allocated for it. This
|
|
is done by sending a quiesce command to the device, since the acknowledge
|
|
for this command contains the IDT's buffer length.
|
|
|
|
2. Acquire the IDT itself.
|
|
|
|
3. Create the interfaces according to the IDT.
|
|
|
|
Buffer allocation
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
In order to simplify the logic that prevents illegal boundary crossings of
|
|
PCIe packets, the following rule applies: If a buffer is smaller than 4kB,
|
|
it must not cross a 4kB boundary. Otherwise, it must be 4kB aligned. The
|
|
xilly_setupchannels() functions allocates these buffers by requesting whole
|
|
pages from the kernel, and diving them into DMA buffers as necessary. Since
|
|
all buffers' sizes are powers of two, it's possible to pack any set of such
|
|
buffers, with a maximal waste of one page of memory.
|
|
|
|
All buffers are allocated when the driver is loaded. This is necessary,
|
|
since large continuous physical memory segments are sometimes requested,
|
|
which are more likely to be available when the system is freshly booted.
|
|
|
|
The allocation of buffer memory takes place in the same order they appear in
|
|
the IDT. The driver relies on a rule that the pipes are sorted with decreasing
|
|
buffer size in the IDT. If a requested buffer is larger or equal to a page,
|
|
the necessary number of pages is requested from the kernel, and these are
|
|
used for this buffer. If the requested buffer is smaller than a page, one
|
|
single page is requested from the kernel, and that page is partially used.
|
|
Or, if there already is a partially used page at hand, the buffer is packed
|
|
into that page. It can be shown that all pages requested from the kernel
|
|
(except possibly for the last) are 100% utilized this way.
|
|
|
|
The "nonempty" message (supporting poll)
|
|
---------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
In order to support the "poll" method (and hence select() ), there is a small
|
|
catch regarding the FPGA to host direction: The FPGA may have filled a DMA
|
|
buffer with some data, but not submitted that buffer. If the host waited for
|
|
the buffer's submission by the FPGA, there would be a possibility that the
|
|
FPGA side has sent data, but a select() call would still block, because the
|
|
host has not received any notification about this. This is solved with
|
|
XILLYMSG_OPCODE_NONEMPTY messages sent by the FPGA when a channel goes from
|
|
completely empty to containing some data.
|
|
|
|
These messages are used only to support poll() and select(). The IP core can
|
|
be configured not to send them for a slight reduction of bandwidth.
|